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Turkey identifies suicide attack suspect

Published: 22 Jul 2015 - 08:34 am | Last Updated: 12 Jan 2022 - 12:49 am

Turkey’s Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu (second left), accompanied by his wife Sare Davutoglu, visits a survivor wounded in Monday’s bomb attack in Suruc, Sanliurfa, Turkey, yesterday. 

Suruc, Turkey: Turkey said yesterday it had identified a suspect over a devastating suicide bombing on the border with Syria blamed on Islamic State jihadists, as the government rushed to bolster security on the porous frontier.
Thirty-two people were killed and more than 100 wounded on Monday when a bomb ripped through a crowd of young socialist activists in a mainly Kurdish region preparing to take aid over the border into Syria.
The attack in Suruc was one of the deadliest in Turkey in recent years and the first time the government has directly accused the IS group of carrying out an act of terror on Turkish soil.
In harrowing scenes yesterday, loved ones of the dead clutched the coffins of the victims in a farewell ceremony in the nearby city of Gaziantep ahead of their burial in towns across Turkey.
“One suspect has been identified. All the (suspect’s) links internationally and domestically are being investigated,” Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said in the regional centre of Sanliurfa after visiting the wounded in hospital.
He added there was a “high probability” the attack was caused by a suicide bomber with connections to IS jihadists.
“We expect this investigation to be concluded as soon as possible,” he said.
Davutoglu said the death toll had risen to 32 and that 29 injured victims were still in hospital.
“What is necessary will be done against whoever responsible for (the attack),” Davutoglu said.
“This is an attack that targeted Turkey.”
The Hurriyet daily said Turkey’s intelligence agency had previously warned the government that seven IS members — three of them women — had crossed into the country in recent weeks with the aim of carrying out attacks.
Previous reports had suggested the bomber was a woman but the DIHA news agency said the person was a 20-year-old Turkish man who had become involved with IS two months ago.
Davutoglu declined to give any further details on the identity.
The IS group, which has claimed swathes of territory in Syria and Iraq right up to the Turkish border, has so far not claimed the Suruc bombing.
But Davutoglu said Turkey was taking steps to improve border security, which has long been criticised by its Western partners. He said the cabinet would discuss today an “action plan” on border security and the government will then take the “necessary measures”.
“Conflicts abroad should not be allowed to spread to Turkey,” he said.
Turkey has long been accused by its Western partners of not doing enough to halt the rise of IS and even colluding with the group, allegations it vehemently denies.
So far, Turkey has not played a full role in the US-led coalition against IS and has been wary of backing the jihadists’ Kurdish opponents, saying the priority is the ousting of Syrian President Bashar Al Assad.
But Davutoglu said the government had “never had any direct or indirect connection with any terrorist organisation”.
Ankara has in the last weeks appeared to take a harder line against the IS group, rounding up dozens of suspected members in Istanbul and other cities.
Nihat Ali Ozcan, security expert at Ankara-based TEPAV think-tank, said the Suruc attack showed the confrontation between IS and Kurdish groups within Syria was “spilling over to Turkish soil”.
“The attack could trigger ideological, ethnic and political fault lines in Turkey,” he told AFP.
The activists from the Federation of Socialist Youth Associations (SGDF) had arrived in Suruc to take part in a rebuilding mission for Kobane, which Kurdish forces had retaken from IS earlier this year. 
Pictures posted on social media showed the toys they had planned to take over for the children of Kobane.
AFP